Big Chunk of Steel

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woodnut

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I saw this on the highway the other day.

This is about the 10 truck I have seem in as many days hauling these.

IMG-20120208-00718.jpg


From what I can figure they are about a 12" thick, 4' wide and at least 15' long.

No clue what they would be for, I thought they were concrete at first but I could see the cut marks on the sides of them.

No I wasn't driving when I took this picture.

John
 
I think that is my latest delivery from Metal Supermarkets for my next project :big:



IronHorse
 
Sorry. Forgot to mention I bought the Brooklyn bridge. On its way to Oz :big:
 

"Sorry. Forgot to mention I bought the Brooklyn bridge. On its way to Oz"

Shipping via Canada? I guess if you can afford a bridge why scrimp on the shipping costs :big:

Peter
 
No worries Peter. Grab your hacksaw and cut off a chunk ;D
 
What would you use to cut this with?

Some kind of big torch I am assuming?

You would need one hell of a hacksaw otherwise.

John
 
there is a place over by hwy 27 and 407 called carbon steel.
i have seen them cutting plate steel 24" or 26" thick (with a torch) and they say they can cut up to 36" thick plate.

the steel in the picture might be going to them.
the last time a was there they had steel sheets piled 15 to 18 feet high. :eek:

chuck
 
There's a fab shop I frequent on business just down the road from me...they can cut up to 24" plate...and I have watched them fire up their new roller and roll 5.5" boiler plate into a semi circle with an 18" inside radius!....COLD!
Amazing what you can do with the right tool!

Dave
 
I have seen CNC torches cut round blanks out of material 12" thick.

Next job for my machine, material isn't even blanked out yet = break time!
(Or Not...)

That CNC torch could burn a 4 foot diameter blank out of a 12" thick plate in about
7 minutes.

Then I'd say it was too hot to pick up with nylon straps.
That never worked either..... ::)

Rick
 
Where I work we get burnouts 48" thick x 72" diameter. They get machined into bearing housings.
 

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